https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/results/NCT03613129
I thought there was a placebovgroup, bad memory maybe. So 14 pateints, no placebo group, a very weird primary outcome TDSS and are those massive confidence intervals in parentheses next to the outcomes?
The TDSS is a massive array of subjective outcomes mushed together. Many of outcomes may be unrelated to the underyling illness, and even it's severity. E.g. sleep problems improving 3 points improves score 3 points which could be highly indicative of biased response. Anxiety and depression account for 10 points and they likely will increase with attention/belief in treatment without intervention. You indigestion could improve, but your overall me/cfs could not.
For all groups pretreatment baseline is 29.5, post treatment 25.3. That's about a 13% improvement, which seems similar to what you would expect with placebo group given this is an unblinded infusion.
Interestingly their is no clear evidence of dose-dependent response from lowest to highest (3.2, 7.5, 1.8, -2.9). Imo too little data and too few points to claim a peaking at the second dosage.
For secondary outcome SF-36, the group with the most improvements scored lowest at baseline, and for SF-36 both highest and second highest dosage showed negative or neutral outcomes.
The best result in the best dosage is about a 6 point improvement taking them to.... 30.7 on a SF-36 0-100 scale from 24.6. This is where the 26% improvement # comes from on cortene's update (even though its 25.1%). Putting it as a percent is kinda misleading to how large the improvement was. Going from 2 to 4 is an 100% improvement but it's also a 2 point one on a scale of 100.
edit 2: I wanted to reference these results a placebo infusion in me/cfs from RituxME. It may be expectations were higher for that drug, and I couldn't find the raw SF-36 numbers at 8 weeks, but it looks like cortene compares unfavorably to both the placebo and the failed intervention.
Overall response rates were 35.1% in the placebo group and 26.0% in the rituximab group
So going up 6 points is a relatively minor change in the illness, again with no "no treatment group" it looks even worse.
I do get it's only a phase 1 trial but given the context, it's hard to imagine justifying optimisim in this drug. There are quite a few side-effects as well, including fatigue and most patients had a headache. It'll be interesting to see if the Bateman Horne center continues to be involved.
edit: I just saw others had looked at this, I thought it was new info my mistake.